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Historic Edmondson Village Shopping Center bags a major grocer
The Edmondson Village Shopping Center is getting a new tenant that’ll further distance the neighboring communities from being a food desert.
ALDI, a discount grocery chain, has signed a lease to move into the West Baltimore complex, according to Lyneir Richardson, CEO of Chicago Trend, and Jeff Baehr, divisional president at ALDI.
The news comes shortly after the announcement that another grocery store, LA Mart, would fill in the vacant space left by Giant Food in the Edmondson Square Shopping Center next door.
The ALDI will fill in a portion of the Edmondson Village center that was damaged in a fire before the Chicago-based developer purchased it. Part of the site work will include building a foundation for ALDI, which will take up 23,000 square feet of the strip mall and begin development sometime next year.
“We had to spend an inordinate amount of time and a herculean sales effort to be able to tell retailers that something new is happening here,” Richardson said.
Beyond making “headway on a development” in the shopping center, ALDI could not provide any additional information.
The Edmondson Village Shopping Center’s ALDI will be the sixth store location in Baltimore City. Earlier this year, ALDI announced a $9 billion expansion plan that would add 800 additional stores nationwide over the next five years. ALDI, which prides itself on providing an “everyday low price,” usually has quaint stores, brands exclusive to their stores and a shopping cart system that requires dishing out a quarter that’s given back once the cart is returned.
ALDI is the first new tenant announced by Richardson since Chicago TREND purchased the property in August 2023. And the road to redevelopment wasn’t easy.
The historic shopping center and some neighboring land are under a 1945 covenant that restricted certain uses and development of the property. The developer had to gather a certain number of signatures from property owners to get it amended, which was a process Richardson said he’d never undertaken before.
Since the purchase, the shopping center received improvements including new lighting, facade repairs, a new roof and investment in security cameras, Richardson said. For years, the shopping center has grappled with drug activity.
Garrick Hines Sr., who lives behind the shopping center and tries to keep residents informed about it, thinks security should be a priority so there’s no “having to look over your shoulder and worry whether or not there will be some kind of threat because you want to shop in your own community.”
But, he doesn’t believe securing the shopping center is a problem solved by money but by having conversations about what the overall goals and visions are. Hines isn’t sure there will be another opportunity like this to extensively develop the shopping center.
“I want it [the shopping center] to be able to highlight in my community that we are resilient, we can adapt to change, we can work together and pave the way for long-lasting improvement,” Hines said.
Richardson said there will be more announcements to come about the Edmondson Village Shopping Center and hopes to have a meeting with the community before the end of the year. He understands that the pace at which development happens can seem slow and discouraging, but things are moving forward.
“We’re trying to keep people positive about the momentum without selling something that’s a dream,” Richardson said.
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